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Tag / Right to be forgotten

  • Hand holding smartphone in dark room

    Newsrooms should reconsider conventions around naming names in published reports about minor crimes

    Northern Ontario news outlet cites compassionate grounds for revising story, the subject of a complaint to NNC Continue Reading Newsrooms should reconsider conventions around naming names in published reports about minor crimes

  • Kendra Seguin, a fourth-year journalism student at Toronto Metropolitan University, teamed up with Carolina Pucciarelli and Sael Forster on We Met U When podcast episode "A Sticky Label."

    Class podcast We Met U When reveals important lessons about power, informed consent and the right to be forgotten

    How revisiting old stories can teach us about our responsibility to sources and the lasting cost of losing trust Continue Reading Class podcast We Met U When reveals important lessons about power, informed consent and the right to be forgotten

  • Black in the jury box: Media is the message

    Crime reporting is one of the oldest forms of journalism. It tells us who should be feared and who should be punished for tearing the social fabric. But its often sensational approach has consequences Continue Reading Black in the jury box: Media is the message

  • Do Canadians want the right to be forgotten?

    New CJF poll finds Canadians split on whether stories harmful to a person’s reputation should be removed from search engines. Continue Reading Do Canadians want the right to be forgotten?

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J-Source, led by the journalism programs at Toronto Metropolitan University and Carleton University, is supported by the post-secondary journalism programs at member institutions of J-Schools Canada/Écoles-J Canada, the R. Howard Webster Foundation and a group of donors.

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